| Frederick Noronha on 10 Jul 2000 21:36:49 -0000 |
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| <nettime> bYtES For aLL: JULY 2000 EZINE |
07.1999-07.2000
bYtES For aLL
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_/ B y t e s F o r A l l --- http://www.bytesforall.org
_/ Making Computing Relevant to the People of South Asia
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Special first anniversary issue. July 1999-July 2000.
We thank all our many friends and supporters who have
offered encouragement along every step of the journey
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* SIMPUTER -- SUB-$200 INTERNET DEVICE to help non-literate
* users: In an effort to bring the Internet to the masses in
* India and other developing countries, several academics and
* engineers have used their spare time to design a sub-$200
* handheld Net appliance, writes Bangalore-based John Ribeiro of
* IDG News Service (June 23).
* The Simputer, or SIMple ComPUTER, will enable India's
* illiterate population (some 48% of the country of one billion)
* to surf the Web. The device was designed by professors and
* students at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) at
* Bangalore, and engineers from Bangalore-based design company
* Encore Software. A prototype of the appliance will be available
* in August.
* The Simputer is built around Intel's StrongARM CPU, with Linux
* as the operating system. It will have 16 MB of flash memory, a
* monochrome liquid crystal display (LCD) with a touch panel
* overlay for pen-based computing, and a local-language
* interface. The appliance will have Infrared Data Association
* and Universal Serial Bus interfaces, and will feature Internet
* access and mail software.
* Its designers expect the Simputer to be used not only as a
* personal Internet access device, but also by communities of
* users at kiosks. A smart-card interface to the device will
* enable the use of the device for applications such as micro-
* banking.
* "We expect to change the model for the proliferation of
* information technology in India," says Professor Swami Manohar,
* professor in the computer science and automation department of
* the IISc. "The current PC-centric model is not sustainable
* because of the high cost of the PC, and also because we expect
* that most of the users will not be literate."
* A subsequent version of the Simputer will also offer speech
* recognition for basic navigation through the software menus.
* The speech dictionary will be customizable to support different
* languages. A text-to-speech system will also be developed to
* take the technology to India's illiterate population. Later
* versions will also offer wireless technology.
* The intellectual property for the device has been transferred
* free to a non-profit trust, called the Simputer Trust, and both
* the software and the hardware for the appliance have been
* offered as open source technology. In the open source model of
* development, users and developers, often unpaid, work together
* to update technology. Manohar says that the trust decided to
* put the technology in Open Source to enable third party
* software developers and designers to add value to the platform.
* The technology for the product will be licensed to
* manufacturers at a nominal fee of $1150, which is to be used to
* finance upgrades to the Simputer. A number of large
* manufacturers have shown interest in licensing the technology,
* though the interest is currently confined to Indian companies,
* according to Vinay Deshpande, chairman of Encore and a member
* of the Simputer Trust. He says that the designers have been
* able to achieve the sub-$200 price point since the electronic
* components used in the device are all off-the-shelf volume
* components, and the software is primarily open source software
* such as Linux.
* http://www.pcworld.com/pcwtoday/article/0,1510,17401,00.html
*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
DISTANCE LEARNING CENTRES have been approved in 10 major cities
of Pakistan by the country's chief executive Gen Pervez Musharraf.
This is for the 2000-2001 period, and is aimed at promoting
information technology (IT). Sources were quoted saying that the
government would spend Rs 220 million for setting up the centres,
which would use facilities provided by Allama Iqbal Open
University and Pakistan Television in learning technologies.
http://www.dawn.com/2000/07/03/nat1.htm
IN WAR-TORN NORTHERN Sri Lanka, where the only postal service
must go by sea to Colombo in the south (taking three weeks or
more to deliver), the Internet is being combined with good old-
fashioned pen and paper to overcome basic communications
struggles.
Neither the sender nor the receiver needs access to a computer or
a phone line, and letters get delivered in a couple of days via
Pan Lanka Networking. To send mail, the sender simply turns up
with a handwritten letter with the snail-mail address of the
recipient. It is then scanned into the computer and sent as an
attachment to the office in Colombo. From there it is printed and
sent to its final destination by standard post. Two special e-
mail addresses, jaffna@pan.lk and colombo@pan.lk are used to
receive the mail.
PAN was set up by IDRC (Canada) to promote the development of
communications infrastructure in poorer regions of Asia and
assist the research communities within the region to create and
share resources.
One major initiative on its way is a proposed pilot project for a
multi-purpose community telecentre (MCT). These are centres where
information and communication technologies are shared by a
particular community, often in remote or regional areas.
Contact: Helge Selrod, Colombo helge@panlanka.net
Maria Ng Lee Hoon at Singapore panasia@idrc.org.sg
[Thanks to Touhid Uz Zaman <t_zaman@sdnbd.org> for this input.]
PAN TIBET INTERNET WORKSHOP WAS HELD FROM May 22-June 02, to
assist Tibet to get wider Internet access. PAN-Tibet project aims
to enable key R&D and government institutions within Tibet to
access the Internet for communications and to use Internet tools
for educational, research and development work.
Trainers from the International Centre for Integrated Mountain
Development (ICIMOD), Tibet University (TU) and Tibet Academy of
Agriculture and Animal Sciences (TAAAS) conducted an Internet
Workshop in Lhasa using ITrain materials.
Participants came from: Tibet Agriculture and Animal Husbandry
College, Tibet Academy of Social Sciences, Tibet Traditional
Medicine College, Tibet Science & Technology Commission,
Government of Lhasa City, Lingzhi Prefecture, Duilong County
Bureau of Science & Technology.
Details received from Touhid Uz Zaman <t_zaman@sdnbd.org>
JOIN A MAILING LIST on learning communities. Send an email to
LearningCommunities-subscribe@onelist.com
Or visit http://www.onelist.com/community/LearningCommunities
IT DEVELOPMENTS IN PAKISTAN. Do a search at The Global Knowledge
Partnership site at http://www.globalknowledge.org You will found
many good discussions on the issues of *IT developments in
Pakistan.
To subscribe to GKD-Digest, send the command:
subscribe gkd-digest
in the body of a message to "majordomo@mail.edc.org"
TO MAKE PCs AFFORDABLE TO MORE INDIANS, the Ministry of
Information Technology is suggesting steps like tax reductions,
technology innovation, and importing second hand or refurbished
PCs. On an average, there are 60 computers for every thousand
people in the globe, nearly 17 times higher than the current
Indian average.
http://www.mit.gov.in [Ministry of IT]
FOR AN IMPRESSIVE update of the Internet in Pakistan visit the
SPIDER webpage. July issue is out at
http://www.spider.tm/jul2000/szone.shtml
PAKISTAN'S OFFICIAL website is at
http://pak.org
VISHWABHARAT IS AN INDIAN web-site that has been put up to
showcase Indian-language and non-English technology. Indian
language fonts and basic word processing software has been put up
on this site, and made freely available, in the public domain.
http://vishwabharat.tdil.gov.in
IN INDIA, THE Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) vice chairman FC
Kohli has long harboured a dream of using IT to solve basic
social problems in India. Pushed by Kohli, a TCS team has
developed a computer-based training system that is designed to
teach illiterate adults how to read in a much shorter time than
conventional methods permit, and at lower costs. The beta version
of the training software developed by TCS has been tested at
three locations in Andhra Pradesh, and the results have been very
encouraging.
Between 120 to 160 million Indian adults are illiterate. It now
takes between six to 18 months to convert an illiterate adult to
a state of functional literacy, and depends on trained teachers
who are in short supply. It could take over 30 years to eradicate
illiteracy going by current trends. If computer-based training
methods are used, the nation could be made fully literate in
three to four years.An illiterate adult is capable of reading
within 10 weeks "at the outer limit" and the system is not
dependent on trained teachers.
TCS researchers developed a new pedagogy of teaching language to
adults. The basic learning unit is not an alphabet but a
syllable. This is based on the theory that adults process both
pictoral and aural inputs in a contextual and holistic mode,
before breaking it down into smaller units of information.
The R&D team is -- more importantly -- developing an Indian
speech recognition engine which will be capable of converting
spoken words into written text and vice versa. This could free
the process from the Indian language overlaid keyboard, which is
a difficult interface to handle even for trainers.
Once created, TCS plans to patent the software and training
modules, but offer them for free use to any agency involved in
eradicating illiteracy. TCS also plans to donate all its 1000 486
PCs to organisations implementing the computer-based anti-
illiteracy programme. Some 200,000 PCs are needed for a
countrywide adult literacy programme, and TCS may be able to
source most of these machines from Tata group companies and its
large international clients for free. 486 machines may not be
able to handle speech recognition. So ways have to be found to
fund Rs 800 crore faster machines. But leaders are are confident
that money is not going to be a bottleneck to implement a large-
computer aided literacy campaign.
Express Computer http://www.expresscomputerindia.com (June 26 issue)
JONATHAN PEIZER IS CIO of Soros Foundations, one the funders of
MediaChannel.org. Award-winning site (http://www.soros.org)
records 180K-250K hits monthly. For further comment on the role
of governments and multi-laterals in remedying the digital divide
and other related issues, e-mail jpeizer@sorosny.org
HEALTH INFORMATION FOR DEVELOPMENT project aims to compile a
Global Directory of Health Information Resource Centres by August
2000, working with a wide range of partners throughout
the world. Planned next is a much-larger, $45 m Information
Waystations and Staging Posts project, which aims to establish a
global network of 1,000 health information resource centres that
will provide locally appropriate content on health issues.
An Information Waystation is a local point of access to health
information received electronically. It has a PC, CD-ROM &
databases, printer, modem, reliable satellite or land telephone,
and prepaid broadband Internet access.
If you want to send these questionnaires out to your friends in
any kind of health centre or network, contact dvt@compuserve.com
English http://www.iwsp.org
French http://www.iwsp.org/lang/qfrench.asp
Swahili http://www.iwsp.org/lang/qswahili.asp
UNRISD INFOTECH WEBSITE is being updated. Details from Matthias
Rosenberg, Research Project on Information Technologies and
Social Development, United Nations Research Institute for Social
Development (UNRISD), Palais des Nations, 1211 Geneva 10,
Switzerland http://www.unrisd.org/infotech
PAKISTAN HAS PROMULGATED AN ordinance for the establishment of
the National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences in the
federal capital. It will be a multi-campus university with its
principal seat in Islamabad, reports APP.
http://www.dawn.com/2000/07/02/nat1.htm
THE WORLD COMPUTER EXCHANGE acts "as a broker in bridging the
international digital divide, promoting cultural understanding
between students in the U.S. and developing countries, and
facilitating the use of technology and experiential education in
education reform." It is a non-profit organization established to
ship donated new and used, working Internet-accessible computers
to formal and informal schools in Africa, Asia, Latin America,
and Eastern Europe. Students in these schools are partnered on-
line with interested schools in industrialized countries. It
works via Ministers of Education, Non-Governmental Organizations,
and Universities.
Details from: Timothy Anderson, President, World Computer
Exchange, 936 Nantasket Ave., Hull, MA 02045
Email: WorldComputerExchange@mediaone.net
http://www.worldcomputerexchange.org/
THE WIRED WORLD is also nudging forward India's battle against
corruption. The National Informatics Centre (NIC) gave its
services to the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC). Citizens can
lodge 'vigilance' complaints through the CVC's site at
http://www.nic.in/cvc Instructions, circulations and notes
issued by the CVC are available for all to read from the site.
JOURNALIST RESOURCE CENTRE of Pakistan was founded in April 1997
and seeks to uphold "every citizen's right to know and express".
Says the centre's Mohammad Tanveer: JRC believes that our media
industry's grasp to technology does not tantamount to produce
positive results in social capital building, rather in many cases
we have witnessed in reverse. We see media's becoming an actor
and instrument of power in growing sectarian and ethnic tensions,
discrimination against women, rising of violence as resort and
high levels of illiteracy. JRC insists upon keeping the full
picture of media politics in our minds and action. This role
demands journalists to extend beyond fulfilling their
professional duties to taking care of their social
responsibilities.
http://www.syberwurx.com/jrc
FOUNDATION DU DEVENIR is seeking persons willing to contribute to
the CD-Rom it is preparing called "Internet: Bridges to
Development". Says the foundation: "We want to present the best
achievements in the area of Internet in order to disseminate the
most efficient experiences and methodologies so that the Internet
will be usefull for development."
Contact: Marie Thorndahl, Geneva
anais@fdd.org http://www.anais.org http://www.bamako2000.org
SEE AN initiative to make computers available to Indian school
students at http://computersforindia.org
TAKING IT SOLUTIONS TO the doorstep of the farming community is
what tobacco giant ITC Ltd plans. It is starting with the launch
of a new Web site for soyabean farmers it has launched in this
city. The Web site, http://www.soyachaupal.com, is billed as the
first of its kind in Hindi, and will give soyabean farmers access
the latest information about the weather, crop position, arrivals
in markets and crop prices. Besides functioning as an information
bank, the site also has an interactive element where farmers'
queries would be answered within 24 hours.
There are plans for developing Web sites on the lines of
www.soyachaupal.com for wheat and rice growing farmers.
INFODEV IS A GLOBAL PROGRAM managed by the World Bank to promote
innovative projects on the use of information and communication
technologies for economic and social development, with a special
emphasis on the needs of the poor in developing countries.
infoDev's June edition of the infoDev bulletin can also be found
at http://www.infodev.org/news/june00.htm
BENTON FOUNDATION, ATTEMPTING to bridge the digital divide.
See http://www.benton.org/
THE UNITED NATIONS, WHICH HAS BEEN OFTEN criticized for not
making the best use of its own Web site, said it would host a
conference in July on speeding up worldwide economic development
through Internet technology. An ECOSOC study released last month
said, "There are more hosts (Internet sites) in New York than on
continental Africa, more hosts in Finland than Latin America and
the Caribbean, and, notwithstanding the remarkable progress in
the application of information and communication technology in
India, many of its villages still lack a working telephone."
http://www.mercurycenter.com/svtech/news/breaking/internet/docs/148515l.htm
THE DRUM BEAT is the email and web network from The Communication
Initiative partnership involving The Rockefeller Foundation,
UNICEF, USAID, CHANGE, WHO, BBC World Service, CIDA, Johns
Hopkins University Center for Communication Programs, The
European Union, Soul City, The Panos Institute, UNAIDS.
Information, ideas, linkages and dialogue on communication,
development and change. Director: Warren Feek wfeek@coastnet.com
http://www.comminit.com
NET GROWTH FACES LANGUAGE, OTHER BARRIERS: India, China and other
large populations may be slow to come on to the Net, but use is
already exploding in Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore and Taiwan --
countries with young populations, AND are also centres of PC
production, where people can easily assemble their own machines
from parts.
URL: http://www.it.fairfax.com.au/e-commerce/20000704/
A44781-2000Jun30.html
ADDRESSING TECHNICAL/VOCATIONAL EDUCATION and training
challenges: Half the world's workers are self-employed or work in
small family enterprises in the informal sector. Many are barely
subsistent. By providing access to learning experiences designed
to broaden skills, TVET programmes can increase productivity and
significantly improve the fortunes of this large group of people.
The social consequences of not meeting this demand are enormous.
http://www.col.org/events/0006events.htm#TVET
THE COMMONWEALTH OF LEARNING (COL) of Canada is an
intergovernmental organisation created by Commonwealth Heads of
Government to encourage the development and sharing of open
learning and distance education knowledge, resources and
technologies.
http://www.col.org Email: dwilson@col.org
DISTANCE EDUCATION HEADLINES ON YOUR DESKTOP: Sign up on a free
list or review the headlines about distance education published
each weekday from around the world.
http://www.distance-educator.com/add_dedailynews.html
DISTANCE-EDUCATOR.COM is a newsletter which includes updated
headlines recently added to its site.
http://www.Distance-Educator.com
UN PLEDGES TO FIGHT DIGITAL DIVIDE: The Internet has given Ivory
Coast villagers instant access to the market prices of their
cocoa and coffee crops, Ethiopian herders the chance to sell
their goats, and Indian children a first glimpse of the Disney
Channel. To make sure these don't remain just isolated cases, the
World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade
Organization joined the United Nations on Wednesday in pledging
to spread information technology and the vast profits of E-
commerce to the developing world, reports the Associated Press.
The statistics tell the story: The World Bank says it has more
telephones than Rwanda, and only 5 percent of the world
population has access to the Internet, according to a U.N.-
appointed panel of experts who studied the issue.
ETHNOTRENDS IS AN ATTEMPT to balance your reading diet with a
dash of minority opinion. Based in Canada, its tentative line up
of stories will cover press opinions from the Chinese, Italian,
Punjabi, Tamil and Ukrainian communities.
Andrew Machalski, Publisher
Email: andmac@ethnomedia.com http://www.ethnomedia.com/
AKDN.ORG PROVIDES INFORMATION on the Aga Khan Foundation, the Aga
Khan University, the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development, the
Aga Khan Health Services, the Aga Khan Education Services, the
Aga Khan Planning and Building Services and the Aga Khan Trust
for Culture. It covers activities in Central and South Asia, in
various parts of Africa, and in Europe and North America.
The Aga Khan Development Network is non-denominational and is
dedicated to improving the well-being and prospects of people in
some of the poorest regions of the world, irrespective of their
gender, ethnicity, race or religion.
For more information, visit http://www.akdn.org/?sc
UNICEF'S EMERGENCY WEBSITE (REVAMPED) NOW ON-LINE: The new
format makes UNICEF field situation reports, thematic reviews,
appeals, & references easily available. Comments & information
requests can be emailed to emops@unicef.org
http://www.unicef.org/emerg
TO BYPASS THE "SYSTEMATIC DISTORTION" of history on both sides of
the (Indo-Pakistan) border, three projects are being attempted by
Dr Mubarak Ali and Mr Isa Daudpota, a physicist by training --
publishing anthologies of the writings of Pakistani and Indian
historians for the Ancient, Medieval and Modern periods; trying
to write a history of the subcontinent with an Indian counterpart
and a project for collectively writing a school text-book of the
history of the subcontinent on the net.
Details from: Isa Daudpota <daudpota@huic.edu.pk> a consultant
with Hamdard University in Islamabad.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/nonfram/060700/detFRO05.htm
DAUDPOTA SAYS THAT HE GOT the idea of such a project from an
Israeli site on the net where Arab and Jewish school kids
interacted with each other. He initially thought of creating a
similar site for Indians and Pakistanis to communicate with each
other through moderators on both sides: "I realised that this
would only become a chat site. And then http://www.chowk.com was
already there, though that is a slightly highbrow discussion group."
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